47 research outputs found
Nursing Care of the Family with a Chronically III, Hospitalized Child: An Alternative Approach
Although nurses successfully employ family crisis intervention strategies when caring for pediatric in-patients, this approach may be counterproductive with families of a chronically ill, hospitalized child. During an admission to an acute care facility these families, if previous levels of functioning have been adequate, may be able to function well despite the stress that all families experience under such circumstances. This article explores an alternative framework for assessing families who are coping simultaneously with a chronic pediatric condition and an acute medical problem. An assessment model based on Miller's 1983 work was developed; it focuses on families' response to long-term health problems and successful adaptation. A clinical case is presented and analyzed using relevant theoretical and research literature. Nursing interventions with both family and staff are included in this presentation.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73701/1/j.1547-5069.1985.tb01628.x.pd
Plant-made subunit vaccine against pneumonic and bubonic plague is orally immunogenic in mice.
Spinal Anesthesia for Open Gastrostomy in an Infant After Stage I Norwood For Hypoplastic Left Heart
Presented as a poster at Indiana Society of Anesthesiologists Annual Meeting 2021
Hemodynamic and Monitoring Considerations in a Total Artificial Heart Recipient
Presented as a poster at Indiana Society of Anesthesiologists Annual Meeting 2021
Conference Program, SAH Marion Dean Ross / Pacific Northwest Chapter Annual Conference, Boise, Idaho, October 7-9, 2011
The conference theme was "Taming the West:
Changing Landscapes and Resource Extraction.
Conference Program, SAH Marion Dean Ross / Pacific Northwest Chapter Annual Conference, Ashland, Oregon, October 23-25, 2015
The conference theme was "Artifice and Authenticity in Architecture! To Play or Not To Play?
THE PRESERVATION OF PRE-WORLD WAR TWO COAST GUARD ARCHITECTURE IN OREGON
372 pagesThe core mission of the United States Life-Saving Service, later to become the
United States Coast Guard, has always been to rescue the victims of shipwreck. To serve
this mission, coastal rescue stations were built by the government to house men and
equipment engaged in rescue operations. The first station in Oregon was built at Cape
Arago in 1878. By the beginning of World War II, the government had built fifteen
distinct stations at eight different ports along the Oregon Coast.
The evaluation and preservation of these stations along the Oregon Coast has
been negligible. This thesis explores the development of each individual station in
Oregon. The preservation of each station is then examined by discussing restoration,
maintenance, adaptive reuse, and interpretative possibilities for each one
An exploratory investigation on the impact of excessive infant crying on the caregiving environment /
Conference Program, SAH Marion Dean Ross / Pacific Northwest Chapter Annual Conference, Seattle, Washington, October 3-5, 2014
The conference theme was "Museums: Building Collections, Building Community.
THE PRESERVATION OF PRE-WORLD WAR TWO COAST GUARD ARCHITECTURE IN OREGON
372 pagesThe core mission of the United States Life-Saving Service, later to become the United States Coast Guard, has always been to rescue the victims of shipwreck. To serve this mission, coastal rescue stations were built by the government to house men and equipment engaged in rescue operations. The first station in Oregon was built at Cape Arago in 1878. By the beginning of World War II, the government had built fifteen distinct stations at eight different ports along the Oregon Coast. The evaluation and preservation of these stations along the Oregon Coast has been negligible. This thesis explores the development of each individual station in Oregon. The preservation of each station is then examined by discussing restoration, maintenance, adaptive reuse, and interpretative possibilities for each one